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Plan your retirement savings and projections.
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Description from store
Retirement calculators are specialized financial-planning tools that estimate whether your current saving and investment trajectory can sustain a desired lifestyle once paycheques stop.
Most calculators begin by gathering personal and economic facts:
Current age and planned retirement age define the savings horizon (accumulation phase) and the post-retirement horizon (decumulation phase).
Current portfolio balance—all investable assets earmarked for retirement.
Annual contribution schedule—how much you add each year, whether flat, growing by a percentage, or following specific salary-deferral rules such as CPF, 401(k), or superannuation caps.
Expected pre-retirement return—often an average nominal percentage (e.g., 5 % before fees).
Desired annual retirement spending—sometimes entered as a dollar figure, other times as a percentage of pre-retirement income.
On the retirement date the balance becomes the starting pool for withdrawals. The calculator then simulates year-by-year cash flows:
Withdrawal rule—either a fixed real amount, a fixed nominal amount, or a dynamic percentage rule such as the 4 % guideline.
Investment return—applied to the remaining balance each year.
Inflation adjustment—if you want constant purchasing power, withdrawals rise by the inflation rate annually.
Retirement calculators are decision-support engines, not crystal balls. They translate financial ambitions into concrete savings and spending numbers, highlight funding gaps early, and let you iterate on “what-if” levers—retiring later, saving more, or spending less. Used thoughtfully, they pivot retirement from a vague hope into a quantifiable, trackable project.